Capital One Financial Corp. v. Kanas

871 F. Supp. 2d 520, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69385, 2012 WL 1806138
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedMay 17, 2012
DocketCivil Action No. 1:11-cv-750
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 871 F. Supp. 2d 520 (Capital One Financial Corp. v. Kanas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital One Financial Corp. v. Kanas, 871 F. Supp. 2d 520, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69385, 2012 WL 1806138 (E.D. Va. 2012).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

LIAM O’GRADY, District Judge.

This matter comes before the Court on Defendants John A. Kanas and John Bohlsen’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt. No. 82). Defendants ask the Court to void the non-compete agreement they entered into with their former employer, Capital One. In the alternative, Defendants request partial summary judgment with re[524]*524gard to their breach of the non-compete agreement and for the Court to strike Plaintiffs request for relief in the form of disgorgement. For the reasons that follow, the Court DENIES Defendants’ Motion but reserves judgment on Defendants’ alternative requests.

BACKGROUND

Defendants John Kanas and John Bohlsen were executives of North Fork Ban-corporation, Inc. (“North Fork”), a bank holding company, and its wholly owned subsidiary North Fork Bank, for some thirty years. North Fork Bank offered banking products and services through a network of over 350 branches, mostly in the New York Metropolitan Area. Kanas and Bohlsen managed North Fork Bank as it grew from a small local bank to a large, efficient, and profitable financial institution.

In 2006, Capital One Financial Corporation (“Capital One”) acquired North Fork in a transaction valued at approximately $13.2 billion. As of the merger, Kanas was President, Chief Executive Officer, and Chairman of the Board of Directors of North Fork. Kanas held the position of President of North Fork Bank for nearly 30 years and Bohlsen had served on the North Fork Board of Directors as Vice Chairman for approximately 15 years. Each Defendant held less than 1% of North Fork’s outstanding shares.

On March 12, 2006, Kanas and Bohlsen each executed a Restricted Share Agreement (“RSA”) with Capital One that was contingent upon the merger’s consummation and the Defendants’ transfer of their respective 1% interests in North Fork to Capital One. Under the RSA, the Defendants were entitled to receive additional compensation ($24 million in restricted shares of Capital One common stock to Kanas, $18 million to Bohlsen) if (1) the $13.2 billion acquisition closed, and (2) the Defendants remained employed by Capital One for a period of three years after the date of the merger. The RSA contained a covenant restricting Defendants from engaging in a competitive business for five years after ending their employment with Capital One. The geographic areas covered by the RSA varied by the competitive business involved; most were national in scope.

The merger closed in December 2006 and Kanas and Bohlsen became Capital One employees. However, in July 2007, Capital One and the Defendants agreed to end their employment relationship. At the time, Kanas was President of Capital One’s Banking Segment, and Bohlsen was Executive Vice President of Commercial Banking. On July 9, 2007, Capital One and each Defendant executed a Separation Agreement, which superseded the RSA. As part of the Separation Agreement, Capital One agreed that Kanas and Bohlsen did not need to work for Capital One for three years for their restricted shares to vest. Under the Agreement, their restricted shares vested on August 6, 2007, their final day as Capital One employees, rather than December 2009 as proscribed by the RSA.

The Separation Agreement also superseded the RSA’s noncompetition covenant. The Separation agreement narrowed the covenant not to compete in terms of geography and the lines of business covered. It also provided exceptions. As revised, the covenant provides that Defendants may not “engage in a Competitive Business (whether as director, stockholder, investor, member, partner, principal, proprietor, agent, consultant, officer, employee or otherwise)” in New York, New Jersey, or Connecticut, subject to three exceptions:

[I]n no event will any of the following activities constitute a breach of the Non-Competition Covenant: (i) owner[525]*525ship for investment purposes of not more than ten percent (10%) of the total outstanding equity securities (or other interests) of any entity; (ii) the provision of services to a corporation or other entity, a portion of the business of which is a Competitive Business, provided that the Executive is not providing services to the portion of the business which is directly engaged in a Competitive Business; or (iii) serving as a principal, partner, director, employee, consultant or advisor to a private equity firm, investment bank (but in the case of an investment bank that is part of a financial services company that also engages directly in the Competitive Business, not for the Competitive Business of that financial services company) or hedge fund, provided that such activities do not involve advising such firm, investment bank or hedge fund with respect to, or analyzing investments in, the Company or its Affiliated Entities.

For the purposes of both the prohibition and exceptions, “Competitive Business” is defined to mean:

the consumer and commercial banking business engaged in by the Company or any Affiliated Entity as of the Separation Date, including the business of acquiring and/or managing (whether by use of a sales force, agents, direct mail, the branch, telemarketing, the Internet or any other channel) all commercial and consumer banking products (including but not limited to, commercial and industrial loans, commercial real estate loans, middle market and small business loans, whether originated directly or indirectly through other lending institutions, and commercial and consumer deposits), in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.

In May 2009, the Defendants and other investors formed BankUnited. BankUnited, Inc. went public in 2011 and has several subsidiaries. Kanas is Chairman of the Board and CEO of BankUnited, Inc., while Bohlsen is BankUnited, Inc.’s Chief Lending Officer and Senior Executive Vice President. Since May 2009, Kanas has served as the President and CEO of BankUnited and on May 19, 2010, Kanas was affirmed as Chairman, and Bohlsen Vice Chairman, of the Board of Directors of BankUnited. With respect to stock ownership, Kanas owns less than six percent and Bohlsen less than three percent of the stock of BankUnited, Inc.

BankUnited is a Florida Bank with all of its branches located in Florida. Capital One has no branches anywhere in Florida. The Defendants maintain that Capital One never objected to the Defendants’ role at BankUnited until filing this lawsuit. Capital One argues otherwise, specifically pointing to a June 2009 meeting between Defendants and Capital One executives to express concern over Defendants’ roles with BankUnited given their obligations under the Separation Agreement.1

BankUnited acquired mortgage loan portfolios from the FDIC and on the secondary market. Certain portions of each portfolio were secured by property in the Tri-State Area. As of December 2011, a portion of the total deposit accounts maintained at BankUnited’s Florida branches were held by customers who listed a primary address in the Tri-State Area.

In October 2010, BankUnited formed a subsidiary, United Capital Business Lend[526]*526ing, Inc. (“United Capital”), which then acquired certain assets of a company located in Maryland that engaged in making equipment loans to franchisees across the United States. Of the total outstanding loans, a portion were secured by equipment located in the Tri-State Area. United Capital is run by its President, Bernard Lajeunesse, who reports to John Bohlsen.

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871 F. Supp. 2d 520, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69385, 2012 WL 1806138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-one-financial-corp-v-kanas-vaed-2012.